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CONTACT:
Corinna Kaarlela, News Director
Source: Michael Mason (415) 476-2557
E-mail: mmason@pubaff.ucsf.edu
Web: www.ucsf.edu
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Feb. 3, 2003
Demand for mental
health care professionals in California will rise by as much as
30 percent in this decade, and there may not be enough workers to
fill the need, according to a study released today by the California
Workforce Initiative of the UCSF Center for the Health Professions.
The labor shortfall
is just one of the many trends likely to strain the state's mental
health care system in the coming years, say the study's authors.
Their far-reaching report describes a fragmented professional population
in which occupational roles often overlap, coordination of patient
care is spotty or nonexistent, certain kinds of expertise are slipping
away, and structural change has been difficult.
"We really
don't know who will be providing mental health care in the future
-- we don't know enough about those providing care now," says
Center Research Associate Tina McRee, MA, who led the study. "In
terms of information for effective planning, whole segments of this
workforce are virtually invisible."
The new study, funded
by the California HealthCare Foundation and The California Endowment
and entitled "The Mental Health Workforce: Who's Meeting California's
Needs?," offers one of the first comprehensive profiles of
the people delivering mental health services to state residents.
Among the team's findings:
- The state will need as many as 80,000 mental health
professionals by 2010. Currently California's licensed mental
and behavioral health care workforce numbers 63,000. More than
half are marriage and family therapists or licensed clinical social
workers.
- Between 1990 and 1997, the percentage of nurses
working in mental health settings fell by one-third. Just 4 percent
of nurses now work in mental health facilities. In 2001, there
were just 419 advanced practice psychiatric nurses working in
California.
- Psychiatrists may also be in short supply. More
than half are age 55 or older, and declining numbers of residents
are choosing the specialty. Already there are not enough psychiatrists
focusing on children, adolescents, and the elderly.
- California may be seeing an oversupply of psychologists.
There are almost 40 per 100,000 California residents, a far higher
ratio than for any other mental health specialty. More than other
specialists, psychologists are heavily concentrated in wealthy
areas of the state. Comparatively few psychologists provide care
in rural areas.
- Urban areas host a disproportionate number of mental
health professionals. Nearly 30 percent of all professionals work
in the Bay Area, though the region is home to only 22 percent
of the state's population. By contrast, two California counties
have no licensed mental health care workers. Only 9 percent of
mental health professionals are employed in the entire Central
Valley and northernmost counties of California.
Because data regarding the size and composition of this important
labor pool have been lacking, policy-makers have found it difficult
to identify ways to enhance access to mental health services in
California, according to the researchers. Among more specific measures,
they suggest that mental health care in California could be improved
by:
- Better defining the professional roles and responsibilities
of each mental health specialty;
- Moving to a "demand" model of patient
care that identifies mental health needs and then determines the
number and qualifications of professionals necessary to meet those
needs;
- Integrating the state's medical and mental health systems of
care to provide better case management and interdisciplinary team
care.
In addition to McRee, authors of the study include Catherine Dower,
JD; Bram Briggance, MA; Jenny Vance; Dennis Keane, MPH; and Edward
H. O'Neil, PhD, all of UCSF. The full report is available at the
UCSF Center for the Health Professions web site at: http://futurehealth.ucsf.edu
The California HealthCare Foundation, based in Oakland, is an independent
philanthropy committed to improving California's health care delivery
and financing systems. Formed in 1996, its goal is to ensure that
all Californians have access to affordable, quality health care.
For more information, visit: http://www.chcf.org
The California Endowment, a private, statewide health foundation,
was established to expand access to affordable, quality health care
for underserved individuals and communities. The Endowment provides
grants to organizations and institutions that directly benefit the
health and well-being of the people of California. For more information,
visit: http://www.calendow.org
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